Thursday 28 Mar 2024
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WELLINGTON/HONG KONG (Jan 29): Asian stocks fell, led by Chinese shares as regulators increased scrutiny of margin loans, while U.S. oil traded near an almost six-year low. Bonds in the region rallied while Malaysia’s ringgit weakened with the yen.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 0.8 percent by 12:25 p.m. in Tokyo, as the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index retreated 2.2 percent. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures gained 0.3 percent after the index’s biggest two-day drop in almost a year. Ten-year Australian bond yields slipped to a record low. The ringgit weakened 0.4 percent as crude traded at $44.57 a barrel in New York. The yen lost 0.3 percent while New Zealand’s dollar was near a four-year low.

Chinese regulators are probing the margin lending that’s helped drive the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index up 47 percent since the end of August. Oil’s bear market is damping inflation prospects and spurring worldwide monetary easing, with New Zealand’s central bank the latest to hint its next move could be a rate cut. The Federal Reserve maintained a pledge to be “patient” on raising benchmark borrowing costs, citing risks to the U.S. economy from an international slowdown.

China’s market regulators “sent a signal that they don’t feel comfortable,” said Yuliang Chang, Hong Kong-based strategist at Deutsche Bank AG. The pace of growth in margin lending and umbrella trusts “is creating a systemic risk in the financial industry,” he said.

The Shanghai Composite slipped 1.5 percent and the CSI 300 Index, which tracks shares in Shanghai and the southern city of Shenzhen, dropped 1.4 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index, which closed at a four-month high this week, retreated 1.1 percent.

Fed Commentary

Regulators will assess a remaining 46 firms, after an initial 45 were checked, Xinhua News Agency reported. The China Securities Regulatory Commission said the checks were routine and shouldn’t be over-interpreted, Xinhua reported. Margin debt increased to a record 773.8 billion yuan on the Shanghai exchange Tuesday after a tenfold increase during the past two years.

The Fed acknowledged global risks in its statement, saying that it will take into account readings on “international developments” as it decides how long to keep key rates near zero. Surprisingly strong job gains argue for tightening sooner, while inflation held down by the plunge in oil prices and a cooling global economy provides grounds for delay.

Ten-year Treasury yields drop 10 basis points, or 0.10 percentage point, to 1.72 percent on Wednesday. Thirty-year yields reached a record low.

Rates on Australian government debt due in a decade fell as much as 13 basis points to an all-time low of 2.47 percent. Similar maturity New Zealand yields slipped 15 basis points to 3.17 percent as the so-called kiwi bought 73.32 U.S. cents. New Zealand’s central bank shifted to a neutral stance on interest rates and hinted it’s prepared to lower them.

Crude Low

The Kospi index dropped 0.2 percent in Seoul, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index fluctuated, with a subindex of energy shares tumbling 2.4 percent. Santos Ltd., an Australian oil producer, plunged 4.1 percent.

West Texas Intermediate crude was little changed after sinking 3.9 percent on Wednesday. Data showing U.S. oil supplies rose the highest level in more than 30 years fueled the declines. Brent added 0.4 percent to $48.64 a barrel in London after a 2.3 percent drop yesterday.

Malaysia’s ringgit depreciated to 3.6342 per dollar, the weakest level for the oil-exporting country’s currency since April 2009.

The yen fell to 117.94 per dollar while the Swiss franc weakened 0.6 percent to buy $1.0983 and 97.34 euro cents. The euro was little changed at $1.1283, while the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index climbed 0.1 percent to 1,161.88, heading for its highest close in at least a decade.

 

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